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Speculoos Cinnamon Bun Babka
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Speculoos Cinnamon Bun Babka

Made with plant milk bread dough (pain au lait)

Matt Ricotta's avatar
Matt Ricotta
Sep 21, 2023
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Speculoos Cinnamon Bun Babka
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Vegan speculoos cinnamon bun babka seen from above
The babka is baked until it’s golden brown on the outside and gooey within

Apple and pumpkin aren’t the only stars this season! In this post, cinnamon and spice shine in a glorious speculoos cinnamon bun babka. It’s a bit of a project, but I promise it’s worth it. The recipe starts with plant milk bread dough, which you can think of as vegan pain au lait. It’s light and pillowy white bread made using the tangzhong method, where flour and milk are cooked into a paste. This gelatinizes the starch in the flour and helps the bread stay soft and fresh longer. The dough also gets a flavor boost from a sweet poolish, which is flour, oat milk, sugar, and a pinch of yeast left to rise for bit before mixing up the main dough. Once the dough is ready, it is rolled in a sweet paste of Biscoff cookie butter (the spread made from those iconic Delta cookies), brown sugar, and cinnamon, braided, topped with a crunchy cookie crumble, and baked until it is golden on the outside and gooey within. The final flourish is a drizzle of vanilla glaze. It is a spectacular fall treat for breakfast or any time of day. Below, I’ve included the dough recipe for all subscribers and the full babka recipe for paid subscribers only.

Baking Daze is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Vegan plant milk bread dough after kneading
A perfect pillow of milk bread dough

First things first. Pain au lait, or milk bread, was one of my favorite things to bake and eat at cooking school in Paris. It is also incredibly versatile, as it produces pillowy, not too rich, slightly sweet loaves or rolls perfect for sandwiches, while also morphing into sweet treats like babka, sticky buns, and more. I knew I had to develop a vegan version, and after many iterations, I landed on one I feel strikes the perfect balance between lightness, richness, and flavor. I have also included a coconut version perfect for my Caramelized Pineapple Coconut Sticky Buns, which I’ll share in a bit.

Shirtless man with vegan plant milk bread dough
Just posing with my dough ;)

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Vegan Milk Bread Dough (Pain au Lait)

Makes enough dough for 1 loaf or 12 buns

30 mins active time, 12 hrs total time (includes overnight chilling)

Ingredients

Sweet Poolish

60 g (1/2 cup) bread flour

60 g (1/4 cup) full-fat, unsweetened oat milk

10 g (2 tsp) granulated sugar

0.75 g (1/4 tsp) instant yeast

Tangzhong

20 g (2 tbsp + 2 tsp) bread flour

100 g (1/4 cup + 3 tbsp) full-fat, unsweetened oat milk

Bread Dough

1 recipe Sweet Poolish

1 recipe Tangzhong

390 g (3 1/4 cups) bread flour

180 g (3/4 cup) full-fat, unsweetened oat milk

50 g (1/4 cup) vegetable oil

50 g (1/4 cup) granulated sugar

6 g (2 tsp) instant yeast

9 g (1 tbsp) kosher salt (Diamond Crystal or see note below)

113 g (1/2 cup) unsalted, cultured-style vegan butter (e.g. Miyoko's), chilled and diced (see note below)

Instructions

Prepare and proof the Sweet Poolish

  1. Combine ingredients in a small bowl and mix thoroughly

  2. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and proof at 82 F for 4 hours - I recommend using a countertop proofer to keep the temperature consistent - see Things I Used below

Prepare and cool the Tangzhong

  1. Combine ingredients in a small saucepan and cook over medium heat, whisking constantly, until the mixture reaches 150 F and it has thickened

  2. Remove the mixture from the heat; pour into a small bowl, cover tightly with plastic wrap, and allow it to cool to room temperature

Make and chill the Bread Dough

  1. Knead all ingredients except salt and vegan butter on low speed for 3 mins

  2. Add the salt, and knead on medium-low speed for 5 mins

  3. With the mixer on, add the vegan butter, one piece at a time, over the course of 2 mins

  4. Increase the speed to medium and continue kneading for about 12-15 more mins. The dough will first be greasy, then sticky, then eventually it will unstick from the bowl - this is the point at which you stop

  5. Perform the "windowpane test" by stretching a small bit of dough between your fingers; if it stretches thin enough to be translucent (hence "windowpane") without breaking, the dough is ready to proof. If not, continue kneading on medium speed in 1-min increments until it passes this test

  6. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl and gather it together into a ball, tossing to coat with oil

  7. Proof the dough at 82 F for 1 hour - I recommend using a countertop proofer to keep the temperature consistent - see Things I Used below

  8. Place the dough in the fridge to chill for at least 6 hours, ideally overnight

  9. The dough is now ready to be used in a variety of applications, including simple loaves or Speculoos Cinnamon Bun Babka, the recipe for which is available below for paid subscribers

Shirtless man making vegan plant milk bread doughShirtless man making vegan plant milk bread dough
Shirtless man making vegan plant milk bread doughShirtless man making vegan plant milk bread dough
Making plant milk bread dough: (1) shaggy dough, (2) adding vegan butter, (3) the windowpane test, (4) finished dough ready to proof

Notes & Variations

Ingredient Notes

  • Kosher salt: I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt, which has larger crystals than other kinds of kosher salt, normal table salt or fine sea salt. As a result, when measured by volume (teaspoons/tablespoons) it will add less "saltiness" than an equal quantity of the other salts. If you are not using Diamond Crystal, I recommend measuring your salt by weight, in which case you won't run into this issue. Otherwise, use half the volume quantity of salt

  • Vegan butter: There are two main types of vegan butter: (1) margarine-style products that are basically butter-flavored vegetable shortening (e.g. Earth Balance or Violife), and (2) cultured-style products made from cashew, coconut, or other kinds of fats (e.g. Miyoko's). I generally prefer the first type in cakes, muffins, and frostings, where the more obvious "butter" flavor and greater stability, and yellow color are beneficial. I prefer the second type in recipes where the fat will caramelize, such as cookies, pie or tart dough, and bread, as margarine-style butters can develop unpleasant burnt oil flavors when heated to high temperatures. Also, cultured-style butter can be browned similarly to dairy butter, while margarine-style butter cannot

For Coconut Plant Milk Bread

  1. Substitute coconut milk in all places where the recipe calls for oat milk, and increase the coconut milk in the Bread Dough to 210 g (3/4 cup + 2 tbsp)

  2. In the Bread Dough, substitute 90 g (1/4 cup + 3 tbsp) unrefined coconut oil for the vegan butter

  3. Otherwise, proceed with the recipe as directed

Things I Used

As an Amazon Affiliate and Food52 Curator, I earn a small commission on anything purchased through these links

Ingredients

King Arthur bread flour

Oatly full-fat oat milk

SAF instant yeast

Diamond Crystal kosher salt

Miyoko’s unsalted vegan butter

Equipment

Brød & Taylor countertop proofer

KitchenAid 5-qt stand mixer

Small saucepan

Slice of vegan speculoos cinnamon bun babka
I bet you can’t stop at one slice!

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I originally created this babka for one of my best friends' birthday parties. She had repeatedly told me that speculoos was her favorite flavor, so I finally caved and brought this as her "birthday cake" to the party, at which point it was promptly devoured by the hordes of business school students in attendance. I think my friend only got a tiny bite at the party, so I promised to make it for her again. In fact, I got so many requests for this babka that I decided it was necessary to formally post the recipe. Upgrade to a paid subscription to view it below!

The sugary crumble topping is not-so-secretly the best part

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